A UNITED STATES
DISTRICT JUDGE HAS AFFIRMED A MAGISTRATE JUDGE'S IMPOSITION OF SANCTIONS FOR
CONDUCT IN THE COURSE OF ADJUSTING AND LITIGATING SANDY CLAIMS
A United States District Judge has affirmed a Magistrate
Judge's imposition of sanctions for conduct in the course of adjusting and
litigating Sandy claims. The Magistrate Judge's decision has been
provided in earlier blogs and is excerpted below.
The District Judge laid out the
entire situation concisely at the beginning of a longer opinion. The
Judge's opening is well worth reading in full:
Pending before the Court is defendant's appeal of an
order issued by Magistrate Judge Gary R. Brown on November 7, 2014, In re
Hurricane Sandy Cases, ___ F.R.D. ___, 2014 WL 5801540 (E.D.N.Y. Nov. 7,
2014)(the “November 7 Order”), addressing the disclosure of draft engineering
reports on insured properties allegedly affected by Hurricane Sandy, and
imposing evidentiary sanctions on defendant Wright and monetary sanctions on
its counsel for failing to obey discovery orders and causing undue delay to
these proceedings. The sanctions arose from (1) a failure
by defendant and its counsel to disclose an initial written report (dated
December 9, 2012) by George Hernemar, an engineer from U.S. Forensic (“USF”),
who had inspected the home at issue and concluded that it had been damaged
beyond repair by Hurricane Sandy, and (2) the conduct by defendant's counsel at
a subsequent evidentiary hearing before Magistrate Judge Brown to determine how
the undisclosed initial report was modified into a second subsequent report,
dated January 7, 2013 (disclosed to plaintiffs), which eliminated certain
observations by the engineer and reached the exact opposite conclusions—namely,
that the defects in the home had not been caused by the storm, but rather were
due to long-term deterioration. In particular, following the evidentiary
hearing, Magistrate Judge Brown found, inter alia, the following: (1) defendant
and its counsel violated their obligations to comply with this Court's
discovery orders by failing to produce the initial engineering report; (2) the
process, in this particular case, that led to the alterations of Hernemar's
observations in the initial report and the reversal of the report's conclusions
was “flawed,” “unprincipled,” “reprehensible,” and “highly improper”; (3) the
failure to disclose the initial report resulted, in this case, in “unreasonably
prolonging this litigation, imposing unnecessary costs upon plaintiffs and
further contributing to the unwarranted delays in resolving this claim”; and
(4) “given the discovery failures by defendant's counsel, the unreasonable
response by defendant to the allegations, and counsel's shocking attempt to
curtail inquiry during the hearing, it is reasonable to charge the costs
associated with the hearing to defendant's counsel.” (November 7 Order, at 13, 15–25.)
For the reasons set forth in detail below, the Court
affirms Magistrate Judge Brown's November 7 Order in its entirety. More
specifically, there is no basis for this Court to conclude that Magistrate
Judge Brown's findings or his sanctions were clearly erroneous or contrary to
law, as would be required for a reversal. Having carefully reviewed the record,
it is absolutely clear to this Court that the process that led to the
modification of the initial engineering report (including the removal of
observations that were inconsistent with the new conclusions) was flawed, and
the concealment of that initial report and the process that led to the new
report (including conduct at the evidentiary hearing) has prejudiced plaintiffs
in terms of delay and costs in this litigation, such that the sanctions were
warranted.
In re Hurricane Sandy Cases (Raimey v. Wright Nat'l
Flood Ins. Co.), ___ F. Supp. 3d ___, 2014 WL 7399179, *1 (E.D.N.Y. December
31, 2014)(Bianco, United States District Judge). [Emphasis added.]
//__________________________________________________//
November 12, 2014
FEDERAL COURT IN NEW YORK INVESTIGATES SANDY ADJUSTING.
Mr. George Hernemar is a
licensed engineer. His employer, an engineering firm, sent Mr. Hernemar
to inspect approximately 50 homes for damage Sandy may have caused to them
in 2012.
The engineering firm that Mr.
Hernemar worked for was retained by the policyholders' insurance
company to investigate their claim of damage. The policyholders
owned a rental house adjacent to their own home. Upon inspection of the
rental house, Mr. Herneman affirmatively wrote that he observed among
other things that Sandy structurally damaged the building.
"However, plaintiffs never
received this report from their insurance carrier." Instead, the
policyholders received a report written afterward, which contained the
conclusion that, among other things, "the subject building was not
structurally damaged". In re Hurricane Sandy Cases (Raimey v. Wright
National Flood Insurance Co.), 2014 WL 5801540 *3 (E.D.N.Y. November 7,
2014)(Brown, U.S.M.J.). [Emphasis by the Court.]
Although Mr. Hernemar took
responsibility for both reports and contended that the first one was only a
draft and not a real report, the Court noted Mr. Hernemar's
testimony that the "'rewrote my report'" and that the second report
did not exist until after Mr. Hernemar had a telephone conversation with a
representative of his employer.
The first Hernemar report
surfaced in the case only by "happenstance," the Court
said. It was apparently not produced in discovery. The second
Hernemar report was produced in discovery and, as noted, the policyholders
received the second Hernemar report, but not the first one.
"Based upon
this [second] report, defendant refused to pay for any structural damage to the
home." In re Hurricane Sandy Cases (Raimey v. Wright National Flood
Insurance Co.), 2014 WL 5801540 *3 (E.D.N.Y. November 7, 2014)(Brown,
U.S.M.J.).
Under all the evidence before it
in this case, the Court concluded that adjustment of Sandy claims is apparently
ripe for investigation:
Against this backdrop arises the instant
dispute, which has exposed reprehensible gamesmanship by a professional
engineering company that unjustly frustrated efforts by two homeowners to get
fair consideration of their claims. Worse yet, evidence suggests that these
unprincipled practices may be widespread.
In re Hurricane Sandy Cases (Raimey v. Wright
National Flood Insurance Co.), 2014 WL 5801540 *1 (E.D.N.Y. November 7,
2014)(Brown, U.S.M.J.).
In addition to
adjusting practices in all of the consolidated Sandy-claim-cases, the
Court considered the case before it, concluding that in the case at bar (1) the
defendant insurance company "is prohibited from supporting its defenses or
opposing plaintiffs' claims with any expert testimony other than that of George
Hernemar," and (2) the plaintiffs' counsel may file a motion "for
reimbursement from defendant's counsel for all reasonable costs associated with
this motion, the hearing and all related briefing, including attorneys' fees,
travel costs and transcription costs".
With respect to this case and
all of the other pending consolidated Sandy cases, the Court further
ruled:
3. Within
thirty days of this Order, defendants in all Hurricane Sandy cases shall
provide plaintiffs with copies of all reports described in CMO 1 not previously
produced—plus any drafts, redlines, markups, reports, notes, measurements,
photographs and written communications related thereto—prepared, collected or
taken by any engineer, adjustor or other agent or contractor affiliated with
any defendant, relating to the properties and damage at issue in each and every
case, whether such documents are in the possession of defendant or any third
party.
In re Hurricane Sandy Cases (Raimey v. Wright National
Flood Insurance Co.), 2014 WL 5801540 *15 (E.D.N.Y. November 7, 2014)(Brown,
U.S.M.J.).